James LeBlanc, Christine LeBlanc Fortin, David LeBlanc and Herman LeBlanc v. Robert E. Snelgrove

2015 VT 112, 133 A.3d 361, 200 Vt. 570, 2015 Vt. LEXIS 91, 2015 WL 5123851
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedAugust 28, 2015
Docket2014-160
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 2015 VT 112 (James LeBlanc, Christine LeBlanc Fortin, David LeBlanc and Herman LeBlanc v. Robert E. Snelgrove) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James LeBlanc, Christine LeBlanc Fortin, David LeBlanc and Herman LeBlanc v. Robert E. Snelgrove, 2015 VT 112, 133 A.3d 361, 200 Vt. 570, 2015 Vt. LEXIS 91, 2015 WL 5123851 (Vt. 2015).

Opinion

¶ 1.

Robinson, J.

This case encompasses two main related sets of disputes. One dispute arises from a landowner’s replacement of his boathouse and construction of ancillary retaining walls that encroach onto his neighbors’ property. This dispute includes claims for declaratory and injunctive relief, as well as damages on account of the landowner’s alleged trespass. The neighbors challenge the trial court’s conclusions that the landowner was entitled to build the encroaching structure by virtue of a deeded easement and that they cannot prevail in a claim for trespass on account of consent or estoppel. Because we conclude that the court’s construction of the deeded easement was erroneous, and the court improperly addressed the other issues in derogation of the *573 neighbors’ request for a jury trial, we reverse in connection with this dispute.

¶ 2. The second dispute — which flows from and is intertwined with the first — involves acts of vandalism to the disputed boathouse by the occupant of the neighbors’ property. The occupant appeals from the judgment against him, and the landowner cross-appeals, raising a host of issues in connection with that judgment. We affirm the judgment in connection with this second dispute.

¶ 3. The following general description of the facts is not disputed, except where noted. Plaintiffs James LeBlanc, Christine LeBlanc Fortin, and David LeBlanc own a property on the western shore of Lake Memphremagog in the Town of Newport. They acquired title to the property as tenants in common in 1993 and 1994 from their father and mother, Herman and Lucienne LeBlanc. 1 Throughout the events giving rise to this appeal, plaintiff Herman LeBlanc lived on the LeBlanc property. Defendant Robert Snelgrove owns the property immediately to the north of the LeBlanc property.

¶ 4. This case arises from Snelgrove’s replacement of a boathouse on his property. The “old boathouse” was located along the southerly boundary of Snelgrove’s property, with its southerly wall bordering the LeBlanc property, and the lake to the east. The boundary between the properties wrapped to some extent along the western (inland) side of the old boathouse. Starting in the fall of 2006, Snelgrove took down the old boathouse and built the “new boathouse” approximately five feet to the north of the previous structure. 2 The original boathouse had straddled a stream that emptied into the lake. When he erected the new boathouse, *574 Snelgrove built a concrete retaining wall at his southerly property boundary in approximately the same location as the former southerly foundation wall of the original boathouse, although the retaining wall was longer than the former boathouse wall. This new retaining wall to the south, along with the southerly foundation wall of the new boathouse to the north, formed a sluice that channeled the stream that formerly ran beneath the old boathouse to the south of the new boathouse. Snelgrove built two retaining walls extending beyond the westerly edge of the southerly wall of the new boathouse, a northern wall and a southern wall. Together, these retaining walls funneled the stream into the channel between the new boathouse and the new retaining wall. Whether the back of the new boathouse extends onto the LeBlanc property, and the extent to which the retaining walls encroach onto the LeBlanc property, were subjects of dispute. Relying heavily on the undisputed fact that the new boathouse was longer than the old boathouse in the east-west dimension, the LeBlancs took the position that the new boathouse itself encroached onto their property. Arguing that the new boathouse was built several feet closer to the lake to the east, accounting for the relatively greater east-west dimension of the new boathouse, Snelgrove argued that the new boathouse was built within the boundary separating the parties’ properties. There was no dispute that portions of the new retaining walls extended onto the LeBlanc property, although the significance of that fact was very much in dispute.

¶ 5. In December 2008, while their challenge to Snelgrove’s zoning permit was pending in the environmental court, the LeBlancs sued Snelgrove in connection with the project, alleging, among other things, that both the westerly side of the new boathouse and the walls of the channel constructed by Snelgrove encroached onto their property. They also alleged that in 2004 and 2005, in connection with construction on his own property, Snelgrove cut off a water pipe leading from a spring to the LeBlanc property, thereby terminating the LeBlancs’ one-third interest in certain spring and water rights. The LeBlancs also alleged that Snelgrove had altered the drainage on his property, causing unpermitted drainage to trespass onto their property. The LeBlancs sought a declaration of the boundary between the LeBlanc and Snelgrove properties; compensatory damages; injunc-tive relief, including removal of the encroaching structures and restoration of their land to its former condition; punitive damages; *575 and attorney’s fees. They requested a “trial by jury on all issues cognizable by a jury.”

¶ 6. Snelgrove counterclaimed. He alleged that the new boathouse in its entirety, and portions of the retaining walls identified in the LeBlancs’ complaint, were on his property, and sought a declaratory judgment to quiet title and establish the boundary line between his property and the LeBlancs’ property. Snelgrove also alleged various acts of vandalism against his property and trespass by Herman LeBlanc and sought damages and injunctive relief for trespass. With respect to the retaining walls that encroached onto the LeBlancs’ property, Snelgrove alleged that they were necessary for lateral support to both the Snelgrove and LeBlanc properties. Snelgrove sought injunctive relief to protect the retaining walls by prohibiting the LeBlancs from taking any action to undermine or erode either party’s property. Like the LeBlancs, Snelgrove included a jury demand in his complaint.

¶ 7. In March 2013, after several years of discovery, mediation, and motion practice, the trial court ruled that Herman LeBlanc lacked standing to sue Snelgrove for trespass because LeBlanc had no ownership interest in the property. The court’s order dismissing Herman LeBlanc as a plaintiff did not affect his status as a third-party defendant with respect to Snelgrove’s counterclaims against him.

¶ 8. After the September 2013 jury draw, the court initially denied James LeBlanc’s motion to sever Snelgrove’s third-party trespass claim against Herman LeBlanc. However, two days before the trial was scheduled to begin on October 9, upon reconsideration, the court granted the motion, separating for trial purposes those claims from the parties’ respective requests for a declaration setting forth the boundary between the two properties, the LeBlancs’ 3 claims that the new boathouse and retaining walls unlawfully encroached onto their property, and Snelgrove’s claims that the walls were necessary to provide lateral support to the respective properties.

¶ 9. At a pretrial conference the day before the jury trial was to begin, the court indicated that it was considering a bifurcated

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2015 VT 112, 133 A.3d 361, 200 Vt. 570, 2015 Vt. LEXIS 91, 2015 WL 5123851, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-leblanc-christine-leblanc-fortin-david-leblanc-and-herman-leblanc-vt-2015.